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The bispecific T cell engager (BiTE) blinatumomab showed promising clinical efficacy in a pilot study of six patients with multidrug-resistant rheumatoid arthritis.
Joint lubrication is important for minimizing friction between articulating joint surfaces and for preventing cartilage wear that can otherwise exacerbate osteoarthritis. This Review examines the advantages and disadvantages of various strategies for restoring normal joint lubrication.
In this Review, the authors provide an overview of the immunological, clinical and pathophysiological features of anti-citrullinated protein antibodies in rheumatoid arthritis, highlighting the latest findings regarding the complex contribution of anti-citrullinated protein antibodies to the disease.
A wearable smart device that uses reconfigurable electronics and conductive polymer-based microneedles was able to monitor inflammation and provide transdermal drug delivery and electrical stimulation in a rat model of arthritis.
Researchers have introduced the term ‘MDA5-autoimmunity and interstitial pneumonitis contemporaneous with the COVID-19 pandemic’ (MIP-C) to describe cases of MDA5 autoimmunity that surged during the COVID-19 pandemic.
New research provides a potential explanation for why long-term sclerostin neutralization leads to continued bone mass gain, despite attenuation of its short-term effects on bone formation.
In this Review, the authors argue that the risk of osteoporosis in patients with inflammatory rheumatic and musculoskeletal diseases (iRMDs) is multifactorial, with contributions from iRMD-specific factors, comorbidities, general risk factors and the effects of iRMD therapies such as glucocorticoids.
As the pace of genetic discovery has accelerated, so too has the need for clinicians and researchers to acknowledge and understand the impact of language in scientific publications. The use of inaccurate language contributes to systemic bias and eugenic ideologies that remain pervasive in biomedical science, including in rheumatology.
Guidelines for the management of psoriatic arthritis (PsA) need to undergo revision to take on board new evidence, particularly in relation to therapeutics. In March 2024, EULAR published updated recommendations for the pharmacological treatment of PsA, and an expert group published consensus statements intended to complement existing guidelines.
Understanding the molecular endotypes that influence clinical phenotypes is a critical step for the stratification of patients with osteoarthritis (OA) into therapeutic subtypes that can help the development of targeted disease-modifying OA drugs (DMOADs) to provide genuine, long-term clinical benefit.
The management of antiphospholipid syndrome is hindered by heterogeneous clinical presentations. Whole-blood transcriptomics have the potential to identify previously unknown disease endotypes, which could inform new treatment strategies. However, such hypothesis-generating data must still account for the results of randomized clinical trials, such as those focused on direct oral anticoagulants in APS.
In this Review, the current landscape of tissue engineering for repair of articular cartilage is discussed, with reference to advances in cell sources, bioactive stimuli and the use of scaffolds, and with consideration of the challenges that result from the inflammatory articular environments in osteoarthritis and rheumatoid arthritis.
The peptide hormone adropin, which is downregulated in dermal fibroblasts in patients with systemic sclerosis (SSc), inhibits TGFβ-mediated fibrosis in in vitro and ex vivo models of human skin, and has potential for the treatment of SSc.
In this Review, Knight and Erkan consider how the 2023 ACR–EULAR classification criteria for antiphospholipid syndrome (APS) can guide future research to subphenotype APS by understanding its pathophysiology, paving the way for the personalized and proactive management of individuals with APS.
Relapsing polychondritis, a rare inflammatory disorder that affects cartilaginous structures, presents challenges in diagnosis owing to overlapping symptoms with other conditions. This Review provides a clinical update on relapsing polychondritis, emphasizing the importance of distinguishing this disease from similar conditions.
Granzyme serine proteases are known for their perforin-dependent cytotoxic activities, but evidence also indicates that they have a range of non-cytotoxic, pro-inflammatory intracellular and extracellular functions. In this Review, the authors discuss granzyme biology with an emphasis on its involvement in rheumatic disease pathology.
Medication adherence in gout is low, and discontinuation of urate-lowering therapy puts patients at risk of flares and cardiovascular events. A strategy to regularly monitor serum urate levels and the dissolution of urate deposits (particularly if visualized by patients) might encourage adherence in the long term.
Multidimensional and single-cell profiling of peripheral blood and inflamed tissues is a powerful and high-resolution tool for the stratification of patients with autoimmune rheumatic diseases into distinct cellular and/or molecular endotypes. The road towards precision rheumatology is long, but the time has come to enter the territory of clinical validation.